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== Topics ==
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!Topic!!Question/Topic Description!!StudentPresenter!!Links to resources (Wiki page, handout, web resources)!!Link to your blog post on this topic|-|x86 Registers||What are the names and sizes of all of the x86_64 registers? Why are they named this way? Which ones have special significance, unusual operation, or are required for specific operations?|| Kieran Sedgwick|| ||
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|x86 Aarch64 Registers||What are the names and sizes of all of the x86_64 Aarch64 registers?Why are they named this way? Which ones have special significance, unusual operation, or are required for specific operations?|| Edwin Lum|| ||
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|Address and immediate values on Aarch64 Registers||What In Aarch64 systems, the size of each instruction is limited to 32 bits. Since some bits are required to encode the names operation, addressing mode, and sizes of all registers, the number of bits available to specify an address or immediate value (constant) are much less than the 64 bits required for a full address or integer value on this on this architecture. How are constant values represented, and what are the limitations on the Aarch64 registersvalues that can be specified? How can you work around these limitations?|| [[User:Chris Tyler|Chris Tyler]]|| ||
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|NASM Syntax||What is NASM, and what are the basic rules of NASM syntax?How do you use preprocessor directives (such as #include and #define) or equivalent?|| Omid Djahanpour|| ||
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|GNU x86_64 gas Syntax||What are the basic rules of GNU Assembler (gas) syntax for x86_64 platforms?How do you use preprocessor directives (such as #include or #define) or equivalent?|| Brendan Henderson|| ||
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|GNU aarch64 Syntax||What are the basic rules of GNU Assembler (gas) syntax for aarch64 platforms?How do you use preprocessor directives (such as #include or #define) or equivalent?|| [[User:Chris Tyler|Chris Tyler]]|| ||
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|Argument storage on x86_64||When a function/procedure is called on an x86_64 Linux system, where are the arguments stored? What if there are many arguments?||Adam Sharpe||[http://www.x86-64.org/documentation/abi.pdf Pages 13-22 of this thing]||[http://adamsharpe8.blogspot.ca/2014/09/assembly-generated-from-function-calls.html Blog Post]
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|Argument storage on aarch64||When a function/procedure is called on an aarch64 Linux system, where are the arguments stored?What if there are many arguments?|| [[User:Chris Tyler|Chris Tyler]] || ||
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|System call numbers on x86_64||What are the system call numbers on an x86_64 Linux system?Where are they defined and how do you use them?|| [[User:Chris Tyler|Chris Tyler]]|| ||
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|System call numbers on aarch64||What are the system call numbers on an aarch64 Linux system?Where are they defined and how do you use them?|| [[User:Chris Tyler|Chris Tyler]] || ||
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|PLT||What In an ELF file, what is a PLT and how is it used?When does an ELF file not contain a PLT?|| [[User:Chris Tyler|Chris Tyler]] || ||
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|Static and dynamic linkingAssembling using gas||How do you use the GNU assembler (gas) to compile an assembly-language program ("assemble" it) from the command line, producing an executable file? What are the differences between static and dynamic linking? Advantages of eachsome useful command-line options?|| [[User:Chris Tyler|Chris Tyler]] || ||
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|CopySingle-on-writestepping with gdb||What is copyHow do you execute a program one instruction at a time (single-on-write stepping) using the GNU debugger (when referring to memory in a Linux systemgdb)? When is it usedHow do you view register contents between steps?|| Hunter Jansen|| [http://calmlycoding.com:7777 slides], [https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1pLEKHT13PxNEpJ06Xa_tBwJXVlr8mjBpme7acNL93AI/edit?usp=sharing slides] || [http://rawkamatic.github.io/open%20source/2014/09/22/SPO-Lab3-GDB-Stepping.html blog post] ||
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|Assembling using gasDividing integers on x86_64 and aarch64||How do you use the GNU assembler (gas) to compile an assembly-language programinteger division instructions work on x86_64 and aarch64?How are they different? What are the advantages of each?|| Gabriel Castro|| ||
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|Single-stepping with gdbStatic and dynamic linking||What are the differences between static and dynamic linking? What are the advantages of each from the point of view of performance, resource utilization, and security?|| Linpei Fan||How do you execute a program one instruction at a time (single[http://cs-fundamentals.com/c-stepping) using the GNU debugger (gdb)programming/static-and-dynamic-linking-in-c.php reference1], [http://infocenter.arm.com/help/index.jsp?topic=/com.arm.doc.dai0242a/ch04.html reference2], [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1993390/static-linking-vs-dynamic-linking reference3] ||[http://linpei.blogspot.ca/2014/09/static-linking-vs-dynamic-linking.html blog post]
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|The Mysterious XOR||x86 and x86_64 code often contains instructions that XOR a register with itself (e.g., <code>xor %eax,%eax</code>). What does this do and why is it used?What is the equivalent in Aarch64?|| Emmanuel Ho Fidelino|| ||
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